Tyson Fury moved into the mandatory contender position for Wladimir Klitschko’s WBO World Heavyweight title with his victory over Dereck Chisora last night at the ExCeL London.

The Manchester ace took his undefeated record to 23 wins when he forced Chisora to retire in the tenth round with a dominant performance to earn his shot at the long reigning Ukrainian king.

It was the second time Fury defeated Chisora following his points win in July 2011 and it was a much better performance from the giant traveller this time around.

The hard-hitting southpaw peppered Chisora with jabs and crosses and landed plenty of hard uppercuts as the Londoner pressed forward with his face getting mark up by Fury’s heavy blows.

Finally in the tenth round Chisora’s corner, led by trainer Don Charles, said to the referee his man had had enough.

Afterwards Fury said, “Chisora never really troubled me and I didn’t take any punches from him, it was a good performance from me and there is still lots more to come, I’ll save the best for Klitschko,” Said Fury.

Fury’s, trainer and uncle Peter, added, “This is a new side to Tyson, he showed patience and maturity by slowing taking apart Chisora, it comes with experience and it now shows that he is ready for Klitschko.”

In a close and thrilling chief support, Billy Joe Saunders handed bitter rival Chris Eubank Jnr. his first career defeat with a split decision to retain his British, Commonwealth and European Middleweight titles.

The Hatfield star also made the Lonsdale belt his to keep with the third and most satisfying defence of the title, plus it was a final eliminator for the WBO World Middleweight title.

Saunders started well in the early rounds with Eubank Jnr. struggling to cope with his quick feet and accurate jab, but Eubank did have some success with some strong uppercuts.

Into the sixth, Eubank Jnr. started to get to work throwing in plenty of hard body shots and uppercuts that dragged Saunders into a brawl for the mid-part of the fight.

In the penultimate round Eubank Jnr. landed some hard shots that Saunders shook off, but it was the champions earlier better work that kept him his titles by a close margin.

Saunders, who defeated the fourth undefeated opponent in a row with his victory, said, “It was a hard, gruelling, fight but I had the toughness and heart to come through and show that I am a real champion and the real deal,”

“I’ve still got lots to learn, I’m only 25, and I’ll listen to my trainer Jimmy Tibbs and my promoter Frank Warren as they’ve got me to this point in my career and we’re now within touching distance of the WBO World title,”

“After starting well in the early rounds, I did get a bit relaxed and let him back in the fight when I shouldn’t have and Jimmy told me I needed to step it up. I know I wobbled him in the second and I remember his legs dipping, maybe I should have stepped it up then, but I feel that I had too much for him in the end,”

“I’m delighted with the win, I’ve defeated my biggest rival and get to keep the British title in my sweetest victory, he goes to the back of the queue now and I’m focussing on my next fight for the world title. I respect him as fighter, as I do any fighter getting into the ring, but I don’t respect him as a person. When I win the world title, and if he can get himself back into winning ways, I’ll give him a rematch, but from now on I don’t want to talk about him, he’s the past, I’m the future.”

Warren said that Saunders will now fight the winner out of another WBO Eliminator between Irishman Andy Lee and Russian Matt Korobov on December 13.

In another big domestic battle, Birmingham’s Frankie Gavin made the fourth defence of his British Welterweight title and regained his Commonwealth title with a unanimous points win over Bradley Skeete.

In further big title action, Lewis Pettitt defended his WBA Intercontinental Super-Bantamweight title with a points win over Santiago Allione; Frank Buglioni defeated Andrew Robinson on points over 10 rounds to regain his WBO European Super-Middleweight title; Mitchell Smith won the vacant WBO European Super-Featherweight title with a 10 round points win over Zoltan Kovacs.

In an action fight against his fiercest pro opponent yet, Jose Ramirez rose to the occasion and claimed a vacant junior welterweight belt Saturday night, outpointing Amir Imam by unanimous decision in the Top Rank ESPN main event.

Oleksandr "The Nail" Gvozdyk spent most of the fight with Mehdi Amar nailing him with an assortment of combinations to claim a vacant interim light heavyweight world title, and Michael Conlan scored an impressive KO victory to stay unbeaten.

Bob Arum and Don King, the most prominent promoters in boxing history, have butted heads for decades. But they are friendly rivals these days and enjoy talking over old times and telling their war stories.

Floyd Mayweather says he will begin training "soon" for a transition into mixed martial arts and that he already has been in contact with UFC welterweight champion Tyron Woodley about working together in the near future.

Gennady Golovkin was in disbelief when Canelo Alvarez tested positive for a banned substance. Along with Golovkin's trainer, Abel Sanchez, they used the word "disappointment," not about Alvarez, but his team.

Golden Boy and Top Rank have signed a deal for Jorge Linares to defend his 135-pound crown against Vasyl Lomachenko, who will move up from 130 pounds, on May 12 at Madison Square Garden in New York, sources said.